Saturday, August 26, 2017

The Puzzle of Ultra-Diffuse Galaxies

The Puzzle of Ultra-Diffuse Galaxies:



A gallery of several ultra-diffuse galaxies discovered in the Perseus galaxy cluster. These objects are barely visible against the background. Diffuse bright spots are foreground stars in the Milky Way. Credit: Carolin Wittmann (ZAH).




Our solar system is located in a spiral galaxy composed of billions of stars, the Milky Way. With the naked eye, we can see some 3000 stars in a dark night. However, if Earth would reside within an ultra-diffuse galaxy, we would only spot a few dozen stars on the sky. Galaxies of this type were either not able to produce more stars in the first place, or they got stripped of their stars by tidal forces.

Intriguingly, though, larger telescopes and improved imaging techniques have recently led to the discovery of many ultra-diffuse galaxies in the harshest environments possible: galaxy clusters.

"We have been asking ourselves how these fragile objects are able to survive among such dense, massive accumulations of hundreds of large and small galaxies", explains Carolin Wittmann, PhD student at the Astronomisches Rechen-Institut (ARI) of the Zentrum für Astronomie der Universität Heidelberg (ZAH). Using very deep optical images obtained in 2012 with the Prime Focus Camera (PFIP) of the William Herschel Telescope (WHT), Ms Wittmann identified about 90 such galaxies in the core of the Perseus Cluster, 240 million light-years away. 

Astronomers wonder how these vulnerable galaxies are able to survive among such dense, massive accumulations of hundreds of large and small galaxies. Are they possibly protected by a high dark matter content? Or might they be just now in the process of tidal disruption?

"Surprisingly, most galaxies appear intact — only very few show signs of ongoing disruption," emphasizes Dr Thorsten Lisker, who initiated the project. If this means that the ultra-diffuse galaxies can withstand the strong tidal field of the Perseus Cluster, then they must contain a large amount of unseen mass—dark matter—whose gravitational attraction acts as a binding force. 

Tidal forces may, however, be the reason why galaxies with the largest sizes are not found in the Perseus cluster core, while being present in the outer regions of other galaxy clusters. Along with international partners, the researchers are now hoping to obtain data of similar quality on the outskirts of the Perseus Cluster, where the environmental influence would have been less strong, preserving more of the original structure of the galaxies.

Credit: ing.iac.es

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